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Microsoft to Push IE 7.0 via Automatic Updates

When its latest stand-alone browser ships in Q4, Microsoft plans to use its patch-distribution mechanism as its primary delivery vehicle. But businesses will be able to control distribution via a Microsoft-provided blocking tool.

Microsoft plans to use its Automatic Updates patch-distribution service to push its stand-alone Internet Explorer 7.0 browser to customers once the product is ready to ship in the fourth quarter of this year.

But just as it did with a couple of service packs—most notably Windows XP Service Pack 2—Microsoft will provide corporations with a way to block IE 7.0s distribution so they can control when and if the product is distributed to their users. And unlike the case with previous "blocker tools," the one for IE 7.0 will not bake in a preset download deadline. As a result, corporations can set IE 7.0 to download on any date in the future they choose, Microsoft officials said.

Because of the myriad security fixes incorporated into the product, Microsoft plans to designate IE 7.0 as a "high priority" update, officials said. But users and administrators will be prompted to opt in and accept the IE 7.0 download; it wont happen automatically without notification, Microsoft officials stressed. Users who have opted to hide access to IE wont be presented with the download option at all, officials said.

To obtain the IE 7 code, users will be required to validate that they are running a nonpirated version of Windows, via Microsofts WGA (Windows Genuine Advantage) authentication mechanism.

"AU [Automatic Updates] is for security fixes for which there is an imminent danger, ones for which the threat of an exploit is so great that users cant risk not running them," Cherry said. "They need some other kind of site where users can easily find and choose the code they want downloaded."

/zimages/2/28571.gifRead the full story on Microsoft Watch: Microsoft to Push IE 7.0 via Automatic Updates